Daily Mail

DNA tests to fight scourge of dog mess

- By Ian Drury Home Affairs Correspond­ent

DNA testing has helped to catch countless serious criminals such as murderers, rapists and terrorists.

Now it is to be used to rid streets and parks of the mess left behind by dogs and their lazy owners.

Barking and Dagenham council, in east London, will become the first local authority in the UK to use the technique to identify irresponsi­ble people who fail to fail clean up after their pets – and to hit them with an £80 fine.

Council chiefs are creating a DNA database of local dogs by encouragin­g owners to take them to a vet to have cells collected from each animal’s cheek using a painless swab.

The proposal is set to be intro-

‘A cleaner, healthier community’

duced after compulsory micro-chipping becomes law in April 2016.

Council tenants will be required to have their dogs DNA tested as a condition of housing agreements.

Dogs not registered will be banned from the 27 parks owned by Barking and Dagenham. Local enforcemen­t officers equipped with microchip scanners will carry out spot checks

Council workers who discover dog mess in streets and parks would take a sample and send it for a lab test, which can trace it to a dog with 99.9 per cent accuracy, it is claimed.

Streetklee­n, the biotechnol­ogy company which is working with the council to implement the PooPrints DNA testing scheme, said it would be cost effective and pointed to similar enforcemen­t in the US which had resulted in a 90 per cent reduction in dog fouling. But dog lovers said the scheme could create ‘negative feeling’ among law-abiding owners.

Caroline Kisko, secretary of the Kennel Club, said: ‘It would be difficult to make this compulsory and enforceabl­e, which is likely to mean that only responsibl­e owners would register. The irresponsi­ble minority, who do not pick up after their dogs, would simply continue to flout the law.

‘We would also be concerned if there was a cost involved for dog owners, which could effectivel­y become a tax on responsibl­e owners.’

But the council’s leader, Darren Rodwell, said: ‘The vast majority of dog owners are socially responsibl­e but a selfish few think it’s OK to not clean up after their pet.

‘Dog mess not only spoils our streets, it’s also a health hazard, especially to young children. It’s why we are using this innovative approach in making a cleaner, healthier and better community.’

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